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Steven Pressley has spoken of his sadness at hearing of Coventry City’s move away from the Ricoh Arena for a second time in the space of six years.
The former
Sky Blues boss was in charge of the team when the club took the decision to move to Northampton Town’s Sixfields Stadium for the 2013/14 campaign – a period he says was one of the most testing in his managerial career.
Pressley , who is still held in high regard by many fans for the way he faced the adversity of a groundshare, feels for the fans who, he says, are the ones that will again suffer after the club last week decided to move 22 miles from the Ricoh to Birmingham City’s St Andrew’s Stadium.
And the 45-year-old, who is currently manager at League Two Carlisle United, believes City risk losing fans, who opt to stay away from Birmingham, on a long-term basis.
“Of course it’s far from ideal but the big question is, will there be the same resistance from supporters to go to Birmingham as there was to go to Northampton?” he said.
“Because there was obviously real resistance and I suppose when you’re playing in a stadium of the size of St Andrew’s and you don’t get terrific support then you can’t create the same intensity to the game.”
Just 1,697 fans turned up to
Sixfields to watch the win over Stevenage in March 2014, and the ten lowest home league attendances ever in the history of the club all came in 2013/14 as supporters boycotted the hugely unpopular move.
He added: “It’s not so much Mark (Robins) and the players who suffer. Of course it’s not ideal that you’re not playing on your home pitch but the people who suffer the most are the supporters.
“That’s the bottom line.
“They’re whole Saturday afternoon is affected in a different manner; how they travel to the games, not going to their local pub before they go to the games – all of those things they do in their own community before they go to the game changes.
“And that’s the biggest impact, in my opinion, not so much the game preparation and all of those football aspects because Mark will keep those as normal as possible.
“The ones who are suffering are the supporters. That’s the reality of the situation.”
Asked if he feels for them, he said: “Of course, it’s very sad.
“We’re all creatures of habit and once you stop going to games on a Saturday afternoon and find something else to do that becomes your habit.
“And sometimes you are never able to entice those supporters back on a regular basis.
“It’s the supporters who have suffered the most in these situations because we, as managers and the players, can adapt and try to find the solution.”
Asked if he can believe history is repeating itself with another groundshare season, Pressley admitted: “Truthfully, yes I can believe it because I think there are outstanding issues that have never truly been resolved in the owner’s mind, so there doesn’t appear to be any closure on that so it’s still outstanding, which makes this latest situation inevitable.”
As to how he thinks Robins will cope and deal with the situation, he said: “It’s a difficult situation because Mark, I feel, has done a terrific job since going in.
“He’s really brought in a good structure to the club and recruited extremely well and progressed the club in a really good manner.
“I just hope for him that this isn’t a real stumbling block to all the work that he’s done.”
So how difficult will it be?
“To be honest with you, the early months were the easiest months because the pitch was in a good condition, the sun was shining and in that respect it was the easiest moments.
“But Northampton during the winter months when the wind was blowing, the conditions weren’t ideal and when we were playing in front of literally a thousand supporters it is far from the ideal environment to play in.
“That was the problem. It’s just not ideal and it’s a situation that you never wanted to happen again, of course, but it’s a situation that Mark will have to manage.
“He’ll try to keep everything as normal as possible because he cannot affect all the other issues. All he can affect is the preparation of the team and the performance, and that’s what he must focus on.
“When it happened to us as a management team we didn’t focus on it initially or make a huge deal about it within the club because we didn’t want to bring in a negative factor to the players, or give an excuse for the players.
“We tried to create a ‘no excuse’ culture, so we didn’t dwell on it. We tried to keep it as normal as possible so for the ‘home’ games at Northampton the players would report in their own cars as they would do for home games at the Ricoh. So we tried to keep a degree of normality to it.
“Every manager is different so I don’t know how Mark will go about it but I’m sure he will concentrate on the things that he can influence.
“And I think that’s the most important thing because Mark can’t do anything about the circumstance. All he can do is manage the situation, and that’s the way we tried to do it.
“We tried not to dwell on the fact that we weren’t playing at home, trying to eliminate the excuses.”